| Literature DB >> 34054969 |
Meng-Xue Xu1, Li-Ping Liu1, Yu-Mei Li1, Yun-Wen Zheng1,2,3,4.
Abstract
As a standard clinical treatment, platelet transfusion has been employed to prevent hemorrhage in patients with thrombocytopenia or platelet dysfunctions. Platelets also show therapeutic potential for aiding liver regeneration and bone healing and regeneration and for treating dermatological conditions. However, the supply of platelets rarely meets the rising clinical demand. Other issues, including short shelf life, strict storage temperature, and allogeneic immunity caused by frequent platelet transfusions, have become serious challenges that require the development of high-yielding alternative sources of platelets. Human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs) are an unlimited substitution source for regenerative medicine, and patient-derived iPSCs can provide novel research models to explore the pathogenesis of some diseases. Many studies have focused on establishing and modifying protocols for generating functional induced platelets (iPlatelets) from hPSCs. To reach high efficiency production and eliminate the exogenous antigens, media supplements and matrix have been optimized. In addition, the introduction of some critical transgenes, such as c-MYC, BMI1, and BCL-XL, can also significantly increase hPSC-derived platelet production; however, this may pose some safety concerns. Furthermore, many novel culture systems have been developed to scale up the production of iPlatelets, including 2D flow systems, 3D rotary systems, and vertical reciprocal motion liquid culture bioreactors. The development of new gene-editing techniques, such as CRISPR/Cas9, can be used to solve allogeneic immunity of platelet transfusions by knocking out the expression of B2M. Additionally, the functions of iPlatelets were also evaluated from multiple aspects, including but not limited to morphology, structure, cytoskeletal organization, granule content, DNA content, and gene expression. Although the production and functions of iPlatelets are close to meeting clinical application requirements in both quantity and quality, there is still a long way to go for their large-scale production and clinical application. Here, we summarize the diverse methods of platelet production and update the progresses of iPlatelets. Furthermore, we highlight recent advances in our understanding of key transcription factors or molecules that determine the platelet differentiation direction.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34054969 PMCID: PMC8112939 DOI: 10.1155/2021/5588165
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cells Int Impact factor: 5.443
Summary of current approaches from human PSCs to iPlatelets.
| Cell source | Feeder cells | Multiple stages | Intervention factors | Specific markers | Production | Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| hESCs | OP9 | MK | TPO | Not reported | Hardly | 2006 [ |
| hESCs | C3H10T1/2, OP9 | HPC, MK | VEGF, TPO, SCF, heparin | CD41a+CD42b+ | 48 ± 0.2 platelets/hESC | 2008 [ |
| hESCs | According to stage | Hemangioblasts/blast, MK | BMP4, VEGF, SCF, TPO | CD41a+CD42b+ | 6.7 ± 0.4 platelets/MK | 2011 [ |
| hESCs | / | HPC, MK | BMP4, SCF, VEGF, FGF2 | CD41a+CD42b+ | Not provided | 2013 [ |
| hPSCs | C3H10T1/2 | HPC, MK | HUVECs (2D bioreactor) | CD41a+ or CD42b+ | Higher than static condition | 2013 [ |
| hiPSCs | / | HPC, HEC, MKP, MK | Multiple cytokines | CD41a+CD42b+ | About 30 platelets/MK | 2014 [ |
| hPSCs | C3H10T1/2, OP9 | HPC |
| Not reported | Not provided | 2014 [ |
| hiPSCs | C3H10T1/2 | imMKCLs |
| CD41a+CD42b+ | 250 MKs/imMKCL | 2014 [ |
| hPSCs | / | HPC, MK |
| CD41a+/CD42b+ | About 7 platelets/MK | 2016 [ |
| hPSCs | / | MK | Shear stress (3D bioreactor) |
| ~42 platelets/MK, ~350 platelets/h | 2014 [ |
| hiPSCs | / | HG/CD42b+MK | SCF, TPO, IL-9, IL-6 | FV+CD42b+ | Not provided | 2017 [ |
| hiPSCs | C3H10T1/2 | imMKCLs | Turbulent flow, shear stress | CD41+CD42b+ | ~70–80 platelets/MK | 2018 [ |
| hiPSCs | C3H10T1/2, OP9 | HSC, HPC, MK |
| CD41+CD42b+ | Not provided | 2020 [ |
hESCs: human embryonic stem cells; hPSCs: human pluripotent stem cells; hiPSCs: human induced pluripotent stem cells; MK: megakaryocyte; HPC: hematopoietic progenitor cell; HEC: hematopoietic endothelial cell; MKP: megakaryocyte progenitor; HSC: hematopoietic stem cell; imMKCL: immortalized megakaryocyte progenitor cell line; TPO: thrombopoietin; VEGF: vascular endothelial growth factor; BMP4: bone morphogenetic protein 4.
Figure 1Schema to generate induced platelets from human pluripotent stem cells. HSC/HPC were induced from PSCs via intermediate stage (ESC-sac or EB) under stimulation of multiple cytokines and finally differentiated into mature MK for platelet release. Transgene combination (GATA1/FLI1/TAL1 or C-MYC/BCL-XL/BMI1) provides novel insights for expandable and cryopreserved MK. B2M knockout by CRISPR/Cas9 helped to diminish the allogeneic response caused by HLA mismatch. Furthermore, a 3D bioreactor can be applied for large-scale iPlatelet production. EB: embryoid body; HLA: human leukocyte antigen; HPC: hematopoietic progenitor cell; HSC: hematopoietic stem cell; imMKCL: immortalized megakaryocyte progenitor cell line; MK: megakaryocyte; TPO: thrombopoietin; VEGF: vascular endothelial growth factor.
Advantages and limitations of current approaches for iPlatelet production.
| Methods | Advantages | Limitations |
|---|---|---|
| OP9/C3H10T1/2 feeder system [ | The cornerstone of hPSC-MK generation | Low platelet production |
| ES-sac system [ | Identifies most effective cytokines during hPSC-MK generation | Long induction period |
| EB formation system [ | Improves the efficiency of MK generationbased on the ES-sac system | Limited efficiency in platelet production |
| Feeder- or serum-free system [ | Without pathogen contamination | Limited efficiency in platelet production |
| HLA-universal iPlatelets [ | Shortens platelet production time | Inevitable off-target effects or genome toxicity effects |
| imMKCLs [ | High stability and cryopreserved storage | High cost |
| Other genetic manipulation [ | Feasibility in genetic manipulation | Inevitable off-target effects |